WOMEN'S MARCH COVERAGE FROM AROUND THE COUNTRY
Protesters flood Washington for women's march | 1:06

Hundreds of thousands of people from around the United States flood Washington, DC, on Saturday for a massive rights march in defiance of America's hardline new president, Donald Trump.
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WOMEN'S MARCH COVERAGE FROM AROUND THE COUNTRY
Massive DC march pushes back against Trump | 1:30

Wearing pink, pointy-eared "pussyhats" to mock the new president, tens of thousands of women massed in the nation's capital, aiming to showing Donald Trump they won't be silent over the next four years. (Jan. 21)
AP

They're taking to the streets once again, this time on the one-year anniversary of the historic Jan. 21 protest that flooded cities across the nation and the world with people in pink knitted caps, waving signs and chanting for causes ranging from women's rights to the rights of immigrants, people of color, laborers, the LGBTQ community and more.

Women's March Michigan, the state organization that sprung from a national swell of feminist sentiment after the November 2016 election of President Donald Trump, plans to march once more. This time it'll be in Lansing and Marquette on Jan. 21, 2018.

"Michiganders will unite one year later at the steps of the state Capitol on Jan. 21, 2018, to celebrate the strides we've made so far and to make plans to build our future," the organization wrote on its Facebook page.

Women's March Michigan also launched a crowd-funded YouCaring page, soliciting online donations for "a sound system, insurance, signage, clean bathrooms and warming areas and anything that helps make the event accessible and free to all who want to march." Donation dollars also will be used for handouts, workshops and maintaining a calendar of events.

Brant Freer and Ruth Tyszka hold up creative signs at the Women's March on Lansing on Saturday, Jan. 21, 2017.(Photo: Robert Killips, Lansing State Journal)